EPPC’s latest work shaping public policy.
View this email in your browser ([link removed])
------------------------------------------------------------
February 20, 2024
------------------------------------------------------------
[link removed]
** Black History Month Is More Complicated Than It Seems
------------------------------------------------------------
Celebrate the story of survival and liberation, but beware dwelling too much on suffering and grievance.
Lance Morrow
Wall Street Journal
How does a person who isn’t black think about Black History Month? With respect? With reverence? With guilt? Curiosity? Indifference?
It depends partly on that person’s own history—on when and how his family arrived in America. Those whose predecessors were present during the wickedness of slavery, and all that followed, will have a livelier sense of the black-and-white binaries of the story than immigrants lately arrived from, say, Kazakhstan. A white New Englander whose ancestors made a fortune in the slave trade, or a Southerner whose forbears exploited black African labor on cotton or rice plantations, will understand the burden of that history. Those whose people came through Ellis Island—potato-famine Irish, Eastern European Jews, Hungarians, Italians—won’t have the same haunted sense of the American past.
READ MORE ([link removed])
EPPC IS HIRING ([link removed])
EPPC is seeking ([link removed]) a part-time (20 hours per week) Program Assistant to support our HHS Accountability Project.
FIND OUT MORE AND APPLY ([link removed])
EPPC has an immediate opening ([link removed]) for a full-time, resident Operations Assistant to carry out a range of administrative and program assignments.
FIND OUT MORE AND APPLY ([link removed])
[link removed]
For The Federalist, Nathanael Blake calls out the hypocrisy of Leftists' support for late-term abortion ([link removed]) .
READ MORE ([link removed])
For The Telegraph, Henry Olsen writes that Biden needs to stand up to his own party ([link removed]) to secure funding to aid Ukraine.
READ MORE ([link removed])
Brad Littlejohn writes for WORLD Opinions that progressives must confront the reality of Biden's advanced age ([link removed]) .
READ MORE ([link removed])
[link removed]
Why I Won't Stand for an Open Border
For the EDIFY podcast, Mary FioRito interviews former Commissioner of U.S. Customs and Border Protection Mark Morgan about concern for national security and how it may conflict with the humanitarian response to immigrants crossing our border.
WATCH HERE ([link removed])
[link removed]
Thursday, February 22, 2024, 10–11:30 am
Russell Senate Office Building
2 Constitution Avenue Northeast
Washington, DC 20002
University of Maryland economist Melissa Kearney has sparked wide-spread public debate about the decline of marriage and its impact on economic mobility, child well-being, and inequality. Her recent book, The Two-Parent Privilege, offers a data-driven review of marriage’s decline, and what that means for kids. On February 22, she will offer a policy-focused presentation on Capitol Hill, followed by a panel discussion with EPPC’s Patrick T. Brown, Alyssa Rosenberg of the Washington Post, and the Niskanen Center’s Joshua McCabe.
Please join us for a spirited conversation on what—if anything—public policy can do to bolster marriage in the 21st century.
SIGN UP HERE ([link removed])
[link removed]
Wednesday, February 28, 2024, 6–8 pm
Catholic Information Center
1501 K Street NW
Washington, DC xxxxxx United States
Join Francis X. Maier for the launch of his new book, True Confessions: Voices of Faith from a Life in the Church, with a response from George Weigel. This event will be offered both in-person and virtually through YouTube. Please register here ([link removed]) .
For those attending in-person, True Confessions will be available for purchase in the CIC’s bookstore.
SIGN UP HERE ([link removed])
============================================================
** Twitter ([link removed])
** Facebook ([link removed])
** Website (eppc.org)
Copyright © 2024 Ethics and Public Policy Center, All rights reserved.
You are receiving this email because you are on EPPC’s mailing list.
Our mailing address is:
Ethics and Public Policy Center
1730 M Street NW
Suite 910
Washington, DC 20036
USA
Want to change how you receive these emails?
You can ** update your preferences ([link removed])
or ** unsubscribe from this list ([link removed])
.